These post are so helpful. My mother is in a nursing home jusy a mile or two down the road from me. I have been caring for her needs the last 3 years. I moved her close to my home into independent apartments, and then to assisted living prior to her moving into a nursing home. Each step has been more difficult then I could have ever imagined, mainly because after three strokes she is wheel chair bound and cannot easily express her needs. My siblings live in other states and are not retired. I have a wonderful husband and so fortunate. I have a tendency to isolate myself when I am going through a life challenge rather then to reach out. I have gone through such a variety of feelings through this experience. I go everyday to the nursing home, sometimes twice a day and do whatever I can to help my mother. Nursing Homes cannot provide the emotional support that someone who is at the end of their life needs. No matter how much I do, I always feel badly that I don't have it in me to do more... And yet I know I have given up my own personal life for the care of my dear mother. It has put a tremendous stress on both my husband and myself. At this point in time we are taking a 10 day break and I have hired 2 caregivers to visit my mother while we are away. I have felt for some time that my husband an I are distant from each other because of all this care that has consumed our life. We are not young ourselves 67 and 74! We are so fortunate in so many ways, especially after I read some of the difficult stories here...but even still it is so tiring and draining emotionally to watch someone you love fading. I wonder when the day comes and my mother leaves this world how will it will be for my husband and myself since my mothers care has consumed our life...I have neglected so many other relationships, and my own interest to do this necessary job. I don't know what will be left of me when it is over. Having this break has left some time to ponder these thoughts. The strain has been all consuming. I have anticipatory Grief and so fearful anticipating what my life will be like after my mother passes. Am interested to know what or if others have these same thoughts, or if I am totally selfish thinking such things.
I have now been gone for 4 days of our 10 day respite vacation on the coast of California. It has been more difficult then I thought it would be to let go and relax. I awake in the middle of the night in terror of leaving my mother without my visits to the NH. As I mentioned before I have hired cargivers to visit everyday. My sister was there for a couple of days, and I worried a lot less while she was there. When I talk to my mother by phone she often cries.....but she does try to put on a brave front. I am determined not to ruin this time with my husband but the feelings keep surfacing. I tell myself that this may be the last time we get away for a long time and I have to control my thoughts, but it is not easy to do. I am so blessed in more ways then not and I pray that I can focus on that instead. Your post help me so much and I just wish I could personally give all of you some relief from this difficult and challenging time. I send my love to each of you!
Like you, we were in the nursing home every day to check on him. Our life still revolved around all his needs. Our grieving process for Dad started years ago, and as Mom said, "We lost him a year ago when the dementia started getting worse." About a week before Dad died, he refused to eat, drink, or take his medications. He became unresponsive to Mom, my husband, the nursing home staff, and me. He had an Advanced Directive, so there was no intervention. Death came on his terms. He's only been gone a few days, and we feel a sense of relief as well as sadness. I am thankful he is no longer in pain, no longer embarrassed by his incontinence, and no longer suffering from all the effects of dementia.
It's weird, however, because we are experiencing feelings of "What do we do now?" No nursing home visits, no dealing with Dad's situation, no constant worry about Dad, etc. You are not being selfish, Zanniegirl. Thinking about yourself and your husband and other family members is normal. Anticipatory grief is exactly what my family experienced, and believe it or not, it has made Dad's passing easier. I'll never forget my Dad, and now I have to look out for Mom. (She's still in good health.) However, my husband and I are looking forward to getting our lives back and doing the things in our retirement that we have planned. Don't be too hard on yourself. You've done the best you can, and that's all anyone can do!
In June my father passed at age 93. I was his sole caregiver and felt a big void in my life where my principal role was caregiver. Slowly, you deal a bit better with the loss, regain your footing and begin to find time for the simple pleasures of life which were on the back burner while you focused (understandably) on your caregiver duties.
Try not to worry, I think things will work out ok for everyone involved. Glad you took a few days to rest.
Please know you are not alone. Until my Dad died I didn't realize I was experiencing anticipatory grief. While I took him to chemo and doctors and cared for him at his home as he became weaker I felt like we were going to beat cancer and felt strong although I lost a lot of weight, couldn't swallow to eat or drink and slept every minute I was not with Dad. My family at home missed me but I was obsessed with saving Dad. It didn't work and the grief now is totally different,
I eat all the time can't sleep and cry daily whenever and where ever it hits me.
Back on antidepressants but after 5 months of taking care of Mom I think I have anticipatory grief for Mom on top of mourning my Dad dying. Do something really selfish for yourself at least once a week. It will feel wrong for a while but you will start to fit it in your routine and it may just save you sanity. Good luck
"The strain has been all consuming. I have anticipatory Grief and so fearful anticipating what my life will be like after my mother passes. Am interested to know what or if others have these same thoughts, or if I am totally selfish thinking such things." = you are NOT totally selfish, believe me you are NOT! What you have said here is exactly the way I feel and I too felt selfish in the past when I felt and still feel these things. I too fear what my life will be like after my Mom passes and fear how I will feel, fear where I must move to [we must sell the house after Mom passes], how will I be able to support myself, etc... My full time job is caring for my Mom who has dementia and terminal cancer. Dad passed several months ago and then Mom was diagnosed with this terminal illness and I have been taking care of them for 2 years already so it has become my full time job--my whole life. The double whammy of Dad passing and the almost immediate diagnosis of mom sent me over the edge and sis and bro and the hospice doctor said that I am the one who is not well also and if I do not get emotional help, I will end up in hospital. And yes, it is emotionally draining,very hurtful, and extremely difficult. So I know exactly how you feel. You are not alone. Anticapitory grief is very real. My Mom is now receiving in-home hospice care, and they send me packets of information and one of them is about this subject. When I read it, it blew my mind because it explained what I am going through, how I feel, when I couldn't myself put it into the proper words. Hospice provides the emotional support that I need. A bather comes in 3x a week, a SW whenever I need to vent, talk, cry, etc...The hospice doctor will come whenever I need him and a hospice RN comes in 2x a week to assess mom or more times if I feel Mom needs it. They prescribe all her meds and I pick them up at the pharmacy. Have you though of getting your Mom in-home hospice and hiring in-home CG if you want your Mom at home? Or even putting her in hospice is, I tell you, the greatest way for your Mom to get the greatest of care at end of life, love, and emotional support for you and your husband and your mother, of course. It sounds as if you love your mother very much, as I do my mom too, and its harder for those of us who have been closer to our parents than those who were not as close to their parents as children or young adults. It almost kills me [as it does to you too I would imagine] to watch Mom sleep and see her deterioration day in and day out--how frail she is, how much weight she has lost, etc... so I know how you feel. If she is at end of life, I suggest you put her in hospice. They have the medical skills and emotional/compassionate skills to deal with end of life issues for your mom and your husband and yourself; not like NH-who only come into the room to either bathe or put that plate of food in front of the patient, give meds, without any compassion or love of any kind. I've never heard of a NH that gives compassion and love, only very negative things. And they deserve that type of description--they earned it all by themselves.
If you can handle it emotionally and have the money to hire CG full time, you can still have mom at home during end of life. But if you cannot [as most people cannot] she sounds very eligible for hospice care. My Mom will most probably go to hospice care when things get very super serious with her and end of life is near. At first I was gung ho and pushed that she pass at home with my CG. But my doctors were more worried about me than mom because I am going through tremendous stress and burnout as you are. So now I am being realistic about it and will probably place mom in hospice towards the end. I am keeping her at home until I cannot take it any more and lose my mind.
Please keep hospice in mind, it will give you a great amount of relief knowing that she is loved and cared for by the loving staff that they have, instead of a cold, dispassionate NH. Hope this helps. Pray to the Lord for guidance, strength, and His Peace which transcends all human understanding. I will be praying for you Zanniegirl.
le faucon.
This discussion really hits home with me. Makes me want to embrace all of you and have a good cry. Wish I had the answer for us. I know the responsibility and caregiving comes at a tremendous physical and emotional cost for most of us. It is a like a nasty secret you only discover after the fact. No martyr here!
God bless each and every one of you!
Im not here to say my life is worse. Im here to tell you, you are not alone. I think what we are really going through is, what I call, "the good child" syndrome. We are doing what we feel is the right thing to do. Our lives are put on hold to take care of someone who did the same thing for us. However, there was something I read the other day on this very site. Dont act out of FOG. Fear, Obligation or Guilt. It put a different outlook on things for me. Plus the fact, I have come to the conclusion. My mother has always been my best friend. My best friend has been gone for a long time. Therefore, I am taking care of what remains of my mother. Yes, the grieving is hard and getting harder.
May God be with you and you find peace on your travels.